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. FOUR f PAGE TH BISMARCK TRIBUN at the Postoffice, Pismarck, N. D., as CITY TO Matter. INO TRI BUNE CO. id Class Foreign Represent: tives” THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ( G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY two. CHICAGO i : ‘ 4 3 DETROIT } CaireMarquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg direct by aur voapy PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | “AtteN EW YORK is ae 3 ‘ _ Fifth Ave. Big.) onal Dancing Institute his eailénl MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | new step, “Prince of Wales.” Easy er din The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use 02 | a5 falling off a horse. : not drepublication of all news dispatches credited to it. or not 4 The otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- | Pesdes taeong.a day off for July the Mished herein, of eco, All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are price also reserved. eit MEMBER AUDIT B with oe Hen SUBSCRIPTION RA Daily by carrier, per URE CIRCULATION | S PAYABI : I IN ADVANCE city © to ow year CeCe eee ee ey eee . i nishinDaily by mail, per y« (in Bismarck)... . it gos Mae Mr. Daily by mail, per in state outside Bismarck). ... 5.00 Side ly by mail, outside of North Dakota........ 6.007, THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1872) | DISON TALKS Seme farm-hand will bump into the great discovery in radio, predicts Thomas A. Edison. He continues | “Everywhere the amateurs are raving over radio. Some! yone of them will wonder what would happen if he should try | cripp! this or that, and presto! he as solved the question of the aye. the p Just as a farm-hand from Geneva, N .Y., walked into the Gen. | cand eral Electrie Co. president at Syracuse and showed him how | greatc 40 hook 2 locomotive up to a high-powered motor, something bourd that has been baffling a corps of expert engincers day and | mothe tight. | the 1: Invention is more chance and accident, the result of plain piers: primeval curiosity, than of creative thinking. So is most indi- the ¢ Vidual succe most gene progre The “stuff” is all there in nature, waiting for an i The « uisi havin) tive Paul Pry to notice it. If you want to invent the perfect | 16, wl airplane, study the perfect, flier—the dragon-fly. suppo of $11 Specialists, even the best of them, get in a rut. ie are so close to the mountain that they see only a small part child, OF it. A light-hearted stranger approaches from a distance sen and, having had a general view, points out the path to climb eight to the top. They | pas “When I get ‘ina rut, [ place the object of my experiments ny y in a pigeonhole and do not touch it again for two or | legislatunee years,” s Edison, j ployed as You have noticed that, when you have a very knotty prob- in hotels., Which you are unable to solve, the solution comes to you ventions t@ easily after you “sleep on it”’—shove the problem aside ihe a hau pur tired mind and relax your concentration by a lony fore: Sleep andl rest. (Phat: way, you “get” the problem. If you stick too closely, Th the problem “gets you.” | a ir Never fear your job. If you are'apprehensive that the | aan task is beyond your handling, you are inviting it to master | se: you. In the long run, the quickest way out of the mess when earni your desk is cluttered with work may be to lock the desk and perm go away for the rest of the y — just to convince yourselt of © that the job hasn’t taken charge of you instead of you taking can charge of the job. It restores your sense of power, of ability. nese Dangerous psychology for a chronic procrastinator. indeg Rn Edison believes that, “as soon as college men are grad- volve vated, their brain folds simply reject all the knowledge they i was have picked up. They fall down on simple questions of of tl dividing so many apples among so many children, things | ttt Speyglearn in primary school.” erin hat’s quite natural. Most of the knowledge we acquire piste in School, we absorb for the purpose of getting through school addit rather than for later use. It soon leaves. age ' So much for today’s visit with Edison. If he hadn’t gone mate in for inventing, he would have made a great philosopher, in sessi Which direction he’s done a pretty good job as it is. revo “¥ .. —_—_- — toe i ‘YOUR SUCCESS base Nature has taught every man to be a salesman when it x comes to making love, comments George Cromwell Blower, it a» New York teacher of applied psychology. | yrar “Nature teaches the boy who would sell himself to his A sweetheart as her husband, that everything about him talks ed and that he must make it talk for and not against him. ike “For that reason, he brushes his hair, washes hjs ears, | of a Shines his shoes, whisks his clothes and puts on his best man- | civil ners and most pleasing smile.” Courtship is the original form of salesmanship. i In In primitive life, the young man brings to his intended aca bride the choicest birds, fish and other game—to convince her ” and that,he will be a “good provider. ist: colored of « vince h who to her. bow “In divilized life, you find the young man performing the oper Same way—displaying, to his sweetheart, his bankbook and und business prospects and the box of candy or flowers. pie The more you study simple psychology the more it will betv occur to you that all life is a matter of salesmanship. num We “go out of our way” to please and hold our friends. a That’s salesmanship. ra We cultivate attractive manners and common-sense de- | “sup meanor, and patiently build up a reputation for honesty and | the. reliability. All. salesmanship. = cui Instinctively we realize that we are here in this material is life on a short trip, with certain qualifications of advantage gpa; to others and certain handicaps that hold us back. We con- whe > centrate to overcome the handicaps and develop the qualifica- are] tions. That's salesmanship—thc super applied-science. And he brings her the rare tone for jewelry, or the rare bird plumage, to con- that he can supply luxuries. He is selling himself | 1168 $ did. Two thoughts will occur to you as you ponder this discus- * cau: sion of salesmanship as a vital part of every human life: = te. First: It would be an excellent idea for every boy and : ie girl to receive, some time or other in their education, a prac- | a pri tical course in the fundamentals of the psychology of sales- for manship. . We can have much productive ability, but with eve out the ability to sell (market) it we are destined to be can-: the dlelights under a bushel. 4 ‘ We Second: Salesmanship applies to nations as it applies to individuals. Amiable forcign relations are a matter of sales- ; manship, and it might be agood idea to let the sales engineers | try their hand at so-called diplomacy—usually the science of | selling gold bricks and then trying to keep the buyers : satisfied. - i cde | The first lesson in genuine human salesmanship is Ralph Waldo Emerson’s essay on “Compensation.” have it in cheap copies. The libraries have it free. It’s prob- ably the sanest thing written in at least five centuries. nt “HOME” World’s largest apartment house is ‘sold: It’s the Theo- dore Roosevelt structure, New York City. In it live 272 families. It has its own restaurant, ice-making plant, drug- ‘storey. shop—even its'own taxicab line... ; ; inds you, of a gigantic ant-hill made of bricks. Is | mple cf what the average metropolitan home will be ! | a it a a few generations unless the airplane breaks up the city? nation of cave.dwellers. . : | heavy Bookstores | %,them in a minute | vurth, those off, with fireworks take a few finger These are the days th mad when be learn boss gets things went bet- ter while he was va Y. Terrible It what news dry. Vurkish bootlegs from Turkey. has yo Just im ne rs will se! world’s ybe ur ampion even serapper could whip a mad railroad conductor, The big picture hats are returning. They fit like parachutes, The movie tions speak © popular because ae louder than words, Foreeasts of this indi ar's peach crop it will be a peach. A good pedestrian once good walker. Now it means a good Jodger ang jumper, cs ) ey p It is hard on a girl to marry man whose mother was a good French went minute: of the new G: helicopter ng up n ply after hearing: note, straight V up, sta Wouldn't it be great if you could send the baby to the laundry? Coal dealers don't: make money during their friends buck. so much Bet a locust working only every , 17 years makes an ant mad. A human heart weighs about nine ounces, while a sweetheart may weigh as much as 300 pounds, Maybe the weeping willows weep because it is too hot to laugh. Cows used to get scared and run when they saw an auto. Now they run when they see a horse. What tickles a ing a dog mu: at more than see- di? They could take by making world c best two out of three. np prize fights Vacations are dangerous. The firm may Besides helping grow crops a good hard rain may keep our ball team from losing, a game. Proposed 12-mile replace the thre mean 12. mile liquor limit to mile limit seems to inland Sceretary of Treasury Mellon knows his business. “He has gone to Eyrope, where our tre: ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Roberts Barton Back to the little train went Nancy and Nick. Nancy was carrying Ruby Joan and Nick, if you ple: was carrying the lost puppy that had run off with Ruby Joan, or (to tell you the right way of it) that had taken her to Lost Town to look for her poor lost shoe-button eycs, “It wv and Mister engine. nice as pie in the yard when. “Who was playing?” asked Nancy. “Why, Puppy and I were playing, Toots had started the ‘saiqg Ruby Joan, “when all at once | his teeth went into my head and I heard a rip and then I couldn’t sce any more. My eyes were gone.” “Tm awfully ,sorry,” said the puppy. “I didn’t mean to hurt her. It was only in fun.” “Well, it’s funny we couldn’t find your eyes in Lost Town,” said Nick. “We've looked everywhere and asked everybody but they weren’t there.” Just then Mister Punch, the con- ductor-man, came along to punch the tickets, “Tick-cts, ple-ase,” he’ called out. “No, no charge for babies or doggies —they ride free. found your lost child, Madam!” “So am I, thank you,” said Nancy happily, “but I'll have to take her to a doctor's. her poor head.” ly poor Ruby Joan was injured. “Oh, goodness!” she gasped. “I've got something! It's her two eycs! They weren’t lost at all! They were just inside her head, Why, I can e ‘@ needle and thread!” Which she did iat once. (To Be Continued. © BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA w Kaovh oll over the Northwest for Quality @ MAIL US YOUR FILMS ®, ummer, but they get in more money | 3 very queer!” said the lost | dolly, when they were all seated in | the little Choo-Choo Express train | “We were just playing as ! I'm very glad you | She has such a hole in, And she stuck in| her finger just to show him how bade | British have launcheg the X-1, largest submarine, French wonder what the X stands for, meant a | rman | { 1 | ‘should the rest of the tradition, that “TELEGRAM | little }of us make a mistake, in {the women whom we kiss and leave. learn it can get along about as ' We are so apt to simply divide the | well without you, 1s |to make a man perfectly happy, still | linger? : JOUN ALDEN PRESCOTT TO SYDNEY CARTON, Sending imports by mail. I'm off bring Leslic home. Expect Mrr and Mrs. Hamilton will come with us. Don’t need you now. Come when- ever you darn ‘please, * ment into wh Little knows how to ce fact that she told re from your gift than you paid shows she has a thrifty mind one that can make the best of a finan’ Tam rather glad that things have turied out this way. In fact, I'm very glad Paula has kept back that one letter which I expect is the most incriminating. I don’t want you to get off too I hope fear and remorse ut your vitals for some ome for, between you and me, Jack, you did play Paula a d— mean triek. Wh I hope I am not one of those “holicr than thou” persons 1 hink, had I been in your newever hard ad been over by. Leslie, I would have Perier, inelosure to you New York to you she r and i; JACK, Letter from Sydney Carton to John Alden Prescott. I confess, old éhap, I read poor "s letter, which you sent me without any comment, with tears in my cy I never thought she had so. much soul, but I guess that is where most ard to Jack. inine sex into two classes, good or bad, and I have almost come to | t the conclusion that all women are | ood and bad. They after all, exactly are just human we are, Jack. tried to Have gotten out of tie old love It seems to me that we should get | before I had gotien into the new. over the old theory that there is a] I know what you are saying, Jack rt of us which no good woman]|—that it’s very casy to preach. S men are not | And I am still holding back in my , although I expect when you | mind as un excuse for you that pos- read poor little Paula’s letter you!sibly might have done the same fe It yourself one. outgrown the we have nd why Anyway, man thing after all, I shall “darn please” to come over and sce you as soon as you return. it takes both an angel and a devil |I like Leslie, like her whole family very much except the man she mar- ried. Goodby, old chap. I'm glad some of your troubles are over, I'm not so sure, Jack. that if you‘ had married Paula Perter, she would jnot have made you happier tian SYD. | Leslie. Leslie to too good for you ee jand besides she is essentially a| Some bungh of dirty crooks passed daughter of luxury. She can’t help | $80,000 counterfeit money on an hon- | that, poor girl, It is the way she | est Halifax bootlegger. ~ EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | NGvER MIND, Miss TAPP, TELE ANSWER THS 'PHONE.. ITS PROBABLY AN ORDGR, NO, THAT'S NOT “4uc’! 2% WANT You TO StoP IN AT THE DEPARTMENT srowe AND QeET THOSS CURTAIN FixTOR|ES ! AND Sée THat You GET HOMS HERE IN DECENT, TINE ! Good Bre! ; IT WAS AN ORDER ALCERIGHT If \ l has jecn brought up, the enyiron-|grievance because of the malignity she Was born, | | a a —————ee——EE—E—E—EEEEEE——EEE EE ') MAKING THE TRIP FOR HIS HEALTH | | Ky is PIER FoR ALASKA |- Les ' People’s Forum || Beulah, N. D. July 2, 1923. Editor Bismarck Tribune: | Dear fir: Many of the people o¥ the Beulah vicinity feel they hi al of our county sheriff which appears in the Fargo Forum of this date. By a staff correspondent of Bismarck. What prompis such biased reports | we can not imagine, unlesspperchance | it is a putrified resentment in the | minds of some political opponents— or the work of some highly polished prevaricator having an interest in disbanding the union at this place | Any man Who knows our sheriff | personally knows that he is going te} follow the line of duty—regarding | friends and foes alike. That no | “warning” from Governor Ni any other authority is nec: We realize that the an' wants a sheriff to put on spiked | shoes and begin walking over the miners at the first indication of any leaning toward organization on their part, they cannot bear the idea of a sheriff showing any humane traits, of his trying to lead people in paths | of peaceftlness by kindly and timely advice, oh, no, pacific admonition is | out of place, he must go with blood | ‘in his eye and a determination to stir up trouble if he finds none. Regarding the statement that he “took considerable time to answar” a phone message from’ Nestos, this is a rotten implication that Conrath | is guilty of laches, I do not know to, just what time or what message this refers, but I do know that I was with ‘him myself at one time when He received word from the central oper. ator that Bismarck wanted him and that he respondeq as promptly as any one could. If Captain Baird is reported cor- rectly when it is stated that he said “the difficulty could have been avert- ed if the sheriff had taken a firm stand at once, but he did not,” then | I suggest that the captain do a lit- tle reinvestigating. As to “imported | aid agitators” this bunk is rehashed often it seems the public woula gag at it. The only paid agitators having been here so far as we know were fully accredited organizers, thége, of course, are vicious and de- | vastating sert of ner-humans in the eyes of thé operators. A man here told me that he had a talk with one ' of these organizers oncef and found him educated, well informed in cur- rent.events, a man of high ideals, and was beginning to admire him un- til he noticed a bulge in his hip pocket vicinity, a bulge resembling a gun, which a little later, during the heat of an argument, was drawn out and proved to he a hymn-book., This | may be a jest but it is good. | The insidious wording of parts of the reports are fully equalled in falsity by the foul exaggeration of other arts; for instance this report says “122 men from the Zap district | appeareq at Beulah—” There was one man here from Zap and I ‘gn rive his name to any interested par- ty. This’ will indicate about the' amount of truth which one may ex- j pect to find in many of these 2 ports, \ The company’s main contention ap- | pears to be that there ts no strike this seems to be claimed because the ' men walked out before an organiza- tion was formed. The district ana! the national officials of the miners’ union have organized this strike, the local conditions show there is a strike, what moré is necessary to get the written consent of the operators to call it a strike? D. E, CONE. SSE — SE | DR. M. E. BOLTON ) Matennathie Physica 19916 4th St Telephone 240 Bismarck, N.D ~ RETITLED TEE EIEIO TET ' 3 ; those he had just MO. y NDAY, JULY 2, 1928 COPYRIGHT 1922 THEMEMILLAN COMPANY RELEASED By NEA SERVICE INC., ARRGT.MET, NEWSP. Svs. BEGIN HERE TODAY food and drink, ‘The farmer hears Jenny Pendean engages Mark] him and comes upon him sitting trenden, famous criminal investi-|eating in the kitchen—a big mun gator, to solve the mysterious dis-| with a red head and a red mustache rf 1a red waistcoat. The man frahiiis Wore Yan" Dia Pen-| when he sees Mr. Brook—that i dean is last seen in the company of] the farmer—he bolts through — th Jenny's uncle, Robert Red ,Jirack kitehen by which he has omc | the two visit ‘Mich: Mr. Brook knows nothing of tl galow near Foruintor Quarry. man and he tells me of his adver Blood cottage found on the floor of the ses testify to having seen Robert ride « je with a heavy Idle. to live with her uncle Brendon motor bi hind the Jenny roe Bendigo Red visits her th ed to Giuseppe Doria, who works for Brendon falls in love with Bendigo tells ais try- Bendigo. Jenny and her uncle him that he fears that Do ing, te win her affections. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “I appre e the confidence and ean return a confidence dd Brendon after a “1 do adm She is, of course, ful, and she has a ger charming nature, With tinction of character your assured that nothing will happ Your niece will be faithful husband’s memory for tion. such a while, to h late many a long month, if not fore “L be tha sw B yo. “We can mark time, 1 don't doubt, till the turn of the year or maybe longér. But there it is: they are thrown together every of their lives and, though Jenny would hide it very carefully from me, and probably from herself also as s she out.” A few minutes ed from beneath descended to later a gong sound- and the two men their meal. It was ia who did the talking while they ate a substantial dinner. He chattered ,on after dinner lighted drank a liquor of some special bran- dy Mr. Redmayne produced in hon- or of Brendon, and then left them. They drank tea at five o'clock and an hour later the detective went on his v A general invitation had been extended to him and the old silox pressly declared that it would give him pleasure to receive Mark as a guest at any time. It was a suggestion that tempted Brendon not a little. nd nother of his Tuscan cigars, The moon had risen as he pursued} clear that the his lonely road and it shone through gathering — scud threatened soon to overwhelm silver light. Clouds flew fast and, above Brendon’s head, _ telegraph wires hummed the song of a gather- ing storm ceeded as irregularly as the and shouting wind, Still deep in thought Brendon tramped on; and then, » where the road fell between a high bank to the windward side and a pine wood on the other, he experienced one of the greatest surprises that life had yet brought him. At a gate, which hung parrallel with the road and opened into the depth of a copse behind, there stood Robert Redmayne. : He appeared to recognize Mark, or at any rate regard him an eremy, for instantly he turned, plunged in- to the woods behind him, and dis- appeared. fitful CHAPTER VI Rebert Redmayne Is Heard This sudden apparition bewilder- ed Brendon, for it argued much be- yond itself. Surely it indicated treachery falsehood among left at “Crow's Nest,” for it was a coincidence al- most {inconceivable that on this day of his chance visit, the wanted man should suddenly reappear in the neighborhood of his brother's house. Yet collusion seemed impossible, for Mark had given no notice to Ben- digo Redmayne of his coming. He swiftly determined that Jenny, or her Uncle Bendigo, or anybody on earth should prevent him from securing Robert Redmay- ne on the following day if it came within his power to do so. he felt little doubt that this would happen. For that night there bwas no hurry. He slept well after an unusual amd&int of exercise and emotion; and he rose late. He was dressing at half past cight when there came a chambermaid to the and not oor. “There's a gentleman must see you this instant, moment, _ ple: sir,” she said. “He's by the name of Mr. Doria and he comes from Captain Redmayne out over at ‘Crow's Nest.’” Not sorry that his might now be simplified the’ girl summon his vi two minutes peared. “So Robert Redmayne, the mur- dercr of Michael Pendean, has turn- ed up?” asked Brendon,” finishing his’ shaving; and Doria showed as. tonishment. ; “Corpo di Bacco! know that?” he asked, “I saw him on my homo,” reptied day's work |, Mark bade sitor, and in Giuseppe Doria ap- How did you , Mark. “I had already. seen him, be- fore thé tragedy on Dartmoor, and I remembered him. What is more, T’m not sure that he didn’t remem. ber me.” , “We arc in fear,” continued Dori 5 “He has not been yet to his brother, but he is near.” “How can you tell that fe is near, if he has not yet been to his broth- or?” . if “Thus we know it. I go every morning early to Strete-Farm on the hills above us for milk and but- ter, I go this morning and . they have an ugly story.. Last night a man entered Strete Farm and took! uld, I guess he’s going to win The man’s thoughts pro-; ture, and then I go home to tell par- my master. describe this man, Mr Jonna nearly hay: between them. They — recog him—he is the assassin! ‘Th: instantly of you and bid nv my bieyele and ride here at best speed to catch you, if it be done before you go.” By nine o'clock the Italian had started homeward, and on as he was sone, Brendon went to the po lice station, borrowed a revolver and a pair of handcuffs, hinted at hi busin d ordered a police lto be as quickly as possibie. A able drove him and befor: setting out he told the local chief of police, one Inspector Damarell, to wait a message over the telephone in the course of the morning. He enjoined strictest seereey for the present. rk, who had studied Mb. Red large government — survey map of the distr uggested an im e search over the most likely ions in the neighborhood. Ie inclined to the belief that the hunted man might sooner trust the wood: than the coast. “If Mrs! Pendean doesn’t mind the veather and there is no shadow of nger to the launch, then I advise that your niece goes down the co a look into the caves as you propose,” he said. “No doubt Doria can be trusted to see sharply after her, Meantime we will quarter the wood. If we could get into touch with the man, it might be possible jt secure him without making any dron mio “When I ne and Ma Redma fit n think car 8 1 prepared for the coming voyage of discovery and, within half an hour, the motor boat danced out from bencath “Crow's Nest.” After they had gone, Bendigo, in a sailor's pea-jacket and cap, lighted a pipe, tock a big black-thorn stick, and set off beside Mark. The police car still stood on the road and, both en- tering it, they soon reached the beside which Robert- Redmayne had appeared on the previous night. There they left the motor and en- tered Black Woods together. Bendigo still talked of his niece and continued to do so. It was a subject on which the other proved very willing to listen. + “She's at the parting of the ways now,” declared Jenny’s uncle. “I can isee her mind working. I grant she loved her husband dearly enough and he made a pretty deep mark on her character, for she's different from what she wa irl.” Mark asked a question. | “When you say that her husband jaltered his wife’s character, in what way did hasdo so “Well—he taught her sense 1 reckon. You'd never think now, would you, that she was a red Red- mayne—one of us—short of temper, pepp. fiery? But she was, as a youngster, Her father had the Red- mayne qualities more developed than any of us and he handed 'em down, She was a wilful thing— plucky and fond of mischief. That was the girl I remembered» when Jenny came back to me a widow. And so I see that Michael Pendean, what ever else he was, evidently had the trick character bit of sense and patience.” _ They tramped the wood and fell in with a gamekeeper, who greeted the trespassers none too amiably. But on learning their errand and re- ceiving a description of the fugitive, he bade them go*where they pleased and ‘himself promised to keep. a sharp watch. Their hunt produced neither sign nor clue of the-man they sought, and after three hours of steady tramping, they returned in the mo- tor car to “Crow’s Nest.” News of direct importance await- ed them. Jenny had not only seen Robert Redmayne but had : reached him; and she returned very dis- tressed and somewhat _ hysterical, while Doria, having done great things in the matter, to brag about them, “We saw him,” said Jenny, “about two miles down the coast, sitting not fifty yards from the sea. Then Giuseppe suggested landing and so approaching him, The thing was to let me reach him, if possible: “We ran by, as though we had not observed him; then, round a little bluff, so that we were hidden, we went ashore, made fast the boat, and regularly stalked him. The poor wretch saw us and leaped up, but it was too late and Giuseppe reached him in a moment and ex- plained that I came as a friend. Doria was prepared to. detain him if he endeavored t, dagen © escape, but he “Is he saneg” (Continued in was prepared asked Bendigo. Our Next Issye) A Thought | o When thou pssseth through ‘the waters, I will be with these and ihrough the rivers they shall not overt thee; when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned ‘neither shalh the flame Kindle. upon thee.—Isa, 43:2, %. | o Ang this is the course of Nature: there is nothing like suffering to en- lighten the giddy brain, widen the narrow: mind, improve the trivial’ heart.—Gharled ‘Reade, eo o learn her a 4 getting |